The Rest, Only Noise

Chapter 1049: he should stop

"why?"

When Wilson said this, there was no obvious doubt or emotional ups and downs, and it seemed that he just wanted to know why.

That is, he is not against Louis resting.

"Benj, I also have a lot of 'whys' to you." Louis asked with a smile, "Why don't we solve it today?"

Wilson was silent, but he didn't mean to resist, just waiting for Louis to throw out his "why".

"This year, we have had a hard time walking."

Wilson had to agree.

"I thought you had changed, but you didn't. I thought that the person who was good at dancing in front of the media, selfless in front of his teammates, and respectful to Patrick was the real you, but it turned out that you were the one who was in Monte Carlo in order to declare himself The dominance of the game and the loss of your senses in the game, the one who isolated your teammates in the finals on your own, is also the real you."

"You are not as perfect as we imagined, so why are you willing to be the second person under Patrick's hands?"

Wilson's mouth rose slightly: "Because my contract hasn't expired yet."

It sounds like a joke, but also a hint.

Wilson's contract expires next summer, and he is free to stay.

This sentence gave Louis enough information, and he didn't need to worry about other "whys" that didn't matter.

"You know why I want to rest?" Louie asked.

Wilson didn't say a word, just shrugged lightly, and expressed in body language: This is why I came to your house.

In the living room of Louis's house, there is a photo frame, which contains the pre-season team photos of each season from 1983 to 1993.

Here's one Celtics, and nine Knicks.

"A lot of the problems we've encountered in recent years would not be a problem if I were the me in 1984." Louis asked benj, "Do you know how I treated Isaiah when I was in Boston?"

Wilson had heard from Tomjanovich about Louie's time in Boston.

While the New York-era Louie was still a tough overlord, he was nowhere near as pervasive as the Boston-era villain.

Louie is a chilling coach, at least for Celtics players.

So Tomjanovich often said in his early years that Louie was much gentler to them.

"Why don't you treat us like Isiah?" Wilson began to have more "whys".

This also happens to be the question that Louis has been thinking about in recent days.

Why has he changed?

It's not like you see JAV, you like Mikami today, you can like Feng Ge tomorrow, and then the day after tomorrow, you will be attracted by Miyu Baifeng.

Louis thought about it, but there was only one answer.

Because the Celtics were never his team, or rather, he didn't take that team as his at all.

That Celtic team was just a springboard for Louie's fame, and when he got what he wanted, he let it go without hesitation.

Because it's not his own team, Louis can act resolutely and do whatever he wants.

But in New York, everything is different.

When he kicked the old Bernard King gang off the team one by one, the team became his team little by little, unquestionably.

He can't treat his players like a sadist.

To this end, he took on a lot of responsibilities that he didn't have to bear in Boston.

Louie picked Ewing, one of his hardest choices. Ewing stirred up his ptsd for Zhou Qi, and he vowed to give this man a different career. The contemporary Bill Russell won't just be a scout's hype, it'll come true. So far, Louie's transformation of Ewing has been successful, but the effort he paid for it was unimaginable when he was in Boston.

And Rodman, whom Louis had hoped would not fall, at least not as deviant as in previous lives.

And Kemp, will he still have countless illegitimate children? Will he still get fat in the long off-season because of weak self-control?

And then there's Mohammad Raouf, who can't help but to mention, when he made a big splash in the 1992 Finals, people exclaimed that littlelu saved another player who was considered a parallel, but he quickly ended up with Changing names and surnames as a starting point has become more extreme, unreasonable, and difficult to approach.

Finally, there is Wilson. Before selecting him, Louie's blueprint for him was a Durant without the ball, a Tracy McGrady type of player who has the foundation to become a superstar, but needs to control his temperament. He did it, but in a way that Louie didn't want to see.

So many responsibilities, so many ideas and aspirations, how many have finally been realized?

Ironically, when Louie is the villain, his goals are always achieved.

And when Louis regards the team as himself, the soft side of human nature will make him soft-hearted.

The more human Louis will suffer more failures.

Ewing didn't become who Louie wanted him to be until the 1993 Finals, and the final part was done by himself, and Louie had to watch from the sidelines.

Rodman was still degenerate, and Louie had no choice but to take his opponent off the starting lineup as a punishment.

...Because Louie treats the Knicks as his own team, and these players are people he values, so for him, if the risk of solving a problem is too great, then hold it down. Sometimes he doesn't think so, but he always chooses to do it subconsciously.

When Wilson asked why Louie didn't treat them like Thomas, he was silent for a while.

"Because, I am your coach." Louie said a seemingly meaningless nonsense slowly, "Because you are my players."

A wave finally appeared on Wilson's face.

"So, you don't want to be our coach anymore?"

"That's another question, benj."

Louie didn't answer the question, which was so complicated that he struggled for days.

But in the presence of Wilson, he could answer.

He thinks he can.

"Do you remember what happened in the finals," Louie asked him.

"I'll never forget it," Wilson said.

"There are many times when I'm really desperate for you guys. I don't see hope, I don't see a chance to reverse, I don't see a winning mentality, we are a mess, and we have no trust in each other, just like a temporary on the field. team formed."

"I'm heartbroken because we were a tight-knit, united team."

"Then, in that awful visiting locker room at Memorial Coliseum in Game 6, we opened up about the accusations Reggie and the others made against you and the punch you gave Patrick that changed a lot of things. ."

"This change has nothing to do with me, it's your spontaneous behavior, because you don't want to lose, you want to win more than those ugly selfish desires and contradictions."

"I saw a similar energy come to you in 1988, but that was six years ago. Six years can change a lot, but you ended up being what I dreamed of you. No entanglements, no jealousy , no anger, nothing else that could affect our win, you're a team again."

Sometimes the coach feels it more deeply than the player.

A game between players is like a movie on the screen, and the coach is the best audience.

"I just stood by and looked at you, Patrick, John, Reggie, everything we've been through, everything we've fought for, you guys are the history of sports. The best team, I'll never have a team like this again."

"Do you understand, benj?"

"It means that no matter what I do, you've all reached the top." Louie paused for a few seconds, allowing himself to change his mood, "so I have to stop here, it's for you, it's for me~www.readwn .com~ is the best result."

Louis can breathe a sigh of relief.

He cannot think so clearly when he thinks about it by himself.

But in the face of Wilson, many problems are self-evident.

He and the Knicks have achieved the highest level of achievement in sports, and should be grateful for the good things that happen to them, the unique bond that will forever hold them together.

Louie has done everything he can with this team, he should stop.

Wilson didn't have to take time to digest what Louie said, he was the party, he knew what was going on, and he could understand Louie.

"Coach, I know what to do."

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